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THE SAN FRA NCISCO CALL, SUNDAY ADVERTISEMENTS. mmer, goods mus! e high es are seve: AARAT USRS ene v s e« cip spring 2.50, 10 6, heels 5 to &, £1.00 to §: et o AV OAAT AN A A Shelf=Room Sale make way for fall stock. Our shelves are ke room for new goods. According- will ical items. | Men's Shoes in lace and congress, - | Men's Oxfords in tan Russia, velour [ \ UFMANNS 832 MARKET st.SF > U rracth, all filled—we want to clear be closed out way below Sale is for one week only. Such makes as Johnston & Murphy. Bannister and Strong & Garfleld, broken sizes only, formerly $5, $6 shoes, closing out at...... ... Pair $1.35 calf or enamel leather, formerly $3.50, now cloging out at..,.$2.45 Men's Ehoes, only .. Canvas Oxfords with heav: and Lace Men's Shoes and Oxfords in patent leather, tan Russia, vicl kid., box calf or patent kid, our regular $3.50 and §4 grades, now..$3.15 I NS VAP EEARNS = P S bt e o EAAACAEERT s BB AT AP0 % 2 3 STRAY BULLET ALMOST KILLS A STAGE DRIVER AUBURN, Aug. 2—There appears to be nothing in the report of a hold-up of the Forest Hill stage “to-day. Driver Henry Crockett and a compa &nd said some one « K near Butcher ranch, and that et almost grazed the driver’s ear. > often that the bullet he and_came who reported ve been a stray hunter. on came into town | d fired a shot at — e | ADVERTISEMENTS. Fine hardwood parlor table, 24-inch <quare top, $1.00. Entire hcuses, flats and hotels furnished: Credit ani free delivery within 100 miles. T. BRILLIANT FURNITURE CO. 538-342 FOST STREET, Opposite Union €. Missouri Pacifi Railway Through service daily to Kansas City and -St. Louis via Scenic : Boute. New observatlon cafe cars. Meals 2 la carte. Personally conducted excursions to Kansas City, Bt. Louis, Chicago, New York, luston end all Eastern points. For full information L. M. FLETCHER, Pacific Coast Agent. 326 California st., San Francisco, Cal ABC Famous the ' World Over—Fully Matured. Sold Everywhere. lay st., 8. L. . aL EY, Cal., Juns 3, ong Woo—Dear With pleasure 1 tes 10 your marvelous. ekill and knowledge. have 8 been = grest sufferer from rheamatisr o more than Tour years. Dy case pronoanced bcurable by several physicians, I was per luabed to iry your remedics. Four moris. ireatment resulted in & complete cure, and a gain in weight of seventy pounds. I attribuis y good health entirely to your medicine. Cor- lally yours, MRE. N. J. ABBOTT, 2132 Cen. T red iseases cur exclusively by Chinese perbe, over 3000 varieties being used. Houss 1806011 e m. 1t 8and 759 p. m. NEW WESTERN HOTEL, EARNY AND WASHINGTON STS._RE- modeled and renovated. KING, WARD & 30, European plan. Rooms, S0c to $150 day: B to $5 week; to $20 month. Free baths. 4ot and cold water every room; fire grates in Wery room; elevator runs ail night. 1 TRODPS GOOL MINERS WRATH Strikers in Pennsylvania Refrain From Ri- oting. SHENANDOAH, Pa., Aug. —Sher_‘an- doah’s eventful week closed to-night| without the slightest indication of dis- order. The town and surrounding coun- | try continue to remain peacetul and no | | trouble is looked for hereabouts so long | as the troops are kept in this vicinity. ere very few strangers in town | , but to-night a large crowd of visitors came into the place trom outlying settlements, as is the custom in all min- ing towns on Saturday nights. The throng was an orderly one and gave the | e no trouble. Sheriff Beddall is ap- | ensive of an outbreak at several There w to-day, he sentries of the Eighth Regiment. of them were siruck but were not | d. A detail of troops made a search | the men, but they escaped in the | darkness. Many rumors are in circulation here ihat attempts will be made to start col- lieri s under the protection of troops, It| d by one of the officers at head- | rs that two collieries operated b; ual companies in the Hazelton re- | gion will resume work on Tuesday. This | cannot be confirmed. General Gobin said | to-day he wiil send the Governor’'s troop | of cavalry off on long marches beginning This information reached the | ers in camp and it was freely pre- by them that they would be sent | in the direction of Hazelton. General | Gobin will not say where he will send | them WILKESBARRE, Pa., Aug. 2—The leaders of the striking miners promise to Mo: tro spring a surprise in a few days. They | claim that after an_investigation they | find that miners’ certificates are being issued contrary to law and that the recip- it alleged, never saw the inside of a coal mine, are being pressed into the ser- vice of the coal companfes. In this way it is declared the companies are increasing the number of their employes. The new men, while they may not be able to mine | n load it. The bosses can do the ween the two it will be pos- E for some of the mines to resum work on a small scale. that the certificates are not being issued by mine examining boards, but by some person or persons who have access to the official papers. Criminal prosecutions are talked of. PROTEST IS ENTERED BY THE RAILROADS MMontana Board of Equalization Will Hear Statements About In- creased Assessments. HELENA, Mont, Aug. 2—The State d lization received protests to-day from representatives of railroads operating in Montana against an increase of 185 per cent in the rallroad assessment | of the State. They will be given a hear- next week. ing The raise in the assessment means that 0900 more in taxes in Montana this than last. Governor Toole favored ihe increase of 300 per cent, but the State Auditor and the State Treasurer, who with himself constituted the majority of the board, induced him to accept the as- sessment as made. The Governor in ex- ining his action said: The Northern Pacific and Great North- vere assessed at only 25 per cent of aluation placed on the property by the Northern Securities Company. We v have been in error in taking $52,000 2 mile as the cash value, but when such successful financiers as Morgan and his sum it certainly makes a prima facle case for the board. Operators Cheat a Poolroom. BEAUMONT, Tex., Aug. 2—By an in- | genious secret code two telegraph opera- { [ | | | ‘ | { | { | | tors yesterday cleaned up a couple of thousand dollars in a local poolroom. One confederate located at a relay station held the results back, sending “post” in- stead and signing the third and fourth letters of the successful jockey’s name. The confederate in the poolroom bet a. cordingly. The disqualification of Ethi in the fourth New York cost them pretty penny, but when F] ‘w(;n at 8t. Louis they back. a lash of Night more than made it St Killed by a Cave-In. | . Frenchmen, were killed n on the seventh level of the mine just before quitting time evening. Five floors of the level ast came down, with about fifty feet of the loose ro Order a suit now; §30 suits reduced to Smith, taflor, 906 Market st. $20. 3. . | mons on the theory that there must al- Y | ington, of the certificates, many of whom, | The strikers say | ;)\r railroads will pay between $420,000 and | es have within a year paid this | NATIONG GOURT MUST DEGIDE Pious Fund Case Soon to Be Presented at The Hague. Archbishop Riordan Will Leave for Europe in a Few Days. —_— Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—Archbishop Rior- dan of San Francisco will leave here next “Wednesday by the steamer Celtic, en route for The Hague, where he will sue the Mexican Government befors the in- ternational court for interest gn Califor- nia’s “plous fund.” The sum involved is | $990,862 77. This fund has a curlous history and dates back to the year 1697, when it was | started by pious people to enable the Jesuit missionaries to carry on their work in what s now Mexico and California. The Jesuits were trustees of the fund, ! | Spanish dominions in 176/ all their prop-| erty, including this fund, was stized by the crown, waich after that administered | this pious fund, and the }'ranciscan friars | were given charge of the missions. When Mexico won her independence from Spain the trust of the pious fund was transferred by Spain to the republic. Since May 30, Isvd, there have been no payments, and Archbishop Riordan fis | now_going before the international court | at The Hague to claim the million which | has piled up since the church authorities in California obtainea their last contribu- tion for the pious fund after Sir Edward Thornton's finding in their behalf in 1869, The contention is that the decree of a ! mixed commission then fully established | the equity and justice of the claim and justifies the present suit for further de- fault. A protocol between the United States and Mexico for the adjustment of | the claim was signed at Washington, by Secretary Hay and Don Azpiroz. The United States selected Sir Edward Fry of England and | K. E. de Martens, a Russian writer on international law, as its arbiters. Mexico jainas Chelli, Judge of the ation of Italy, and Savornin Lohman, a Judge of the highest court in Holland. These four will name a fifth member of the court, which will meet at The Hague on Septémber 1. Jackson H. Ralston of Washington, D. | C., will be the agent of the United States and Amelio Pardo, Mexican Mmister to Belgium and Holland, will act for Mexico. Archbishop Riordan will be accomuanied Ly Garrett McEnerny, his legal adviser: Senator Stewart of Nevada. Sherman Doyle and Judge Penfleld of the Depart- ment of State. i | i BRITISH POSTOFFICE | HAS POOR TELEGRAPHERS | Circular to Operators Indicates That the Government Has Awakened to Inefficiency. LONDON, Aug. 2—The confessed inef- fiency of the postoffice telegraph service is revealed in a circular of instruction to the effect that a considerable percentage | of the 3000 operators employed in the cen- tral office at London are inexperienced tand inefficient and directing operators at outside offices to adapt their rate of werking to the capacity of receivers in the central office. Austen Chamberlain, Financial Secre- tary of the Treasury, endeavored to ex- { plain the matter in the House of Com ways be ‘many recruits employed, but old telegraphers deny this and point out that yvears of instruction were required formerly, while now only three months 18 exacted before actual service is begun. The inefliciency, it is asserted, 1is due | wholly to new economies undertaken in | the department, since plenty of efficjent employes are available, It i§ considered extraordinary that in the entire telegraph service no typewriters are used except a few in the foreign departments. DAUGHTER IS BORN - TO PRINCESS ROSPIGLIOSI Opponents to the Marriage of a Form- er Washington Woman Are Rejoicing. ROME, Aug. 2—The Princess Rospigli- osi, who was Miss Marie Reld of Wash- D. C., gave birth to-day to a daughter. Both mother and child are well. There is considerable rejoicing among those who have been opposed to the Prince’s marriage at the fact that the child is not a boy. The Princess Rospigliosi was married to the Prince after a divorce from Frederic Parkhurst of Bangor, Me. The Catholic | Church did not recognize this divorce and refused to give permission to a Blue sis- ter to rurse the Princess at her confine- ment, holding that the marrlage to the Frince was non-existent. Chinese Envoy to Visit Roosevelt. WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.—Embassador i Porter has cabled the State Department { that Prince Chen, the Chinese envoy to | the coronation, with his suite, sailed to- +day from Cherbourg on the St. Paul for | New York. At New York the Prince will be met by Minister Wu, who will escort kEim to Oyster Bay, where he will be dined by President Roosevelt. A special car furnished by the State Department bring him to Washington, where he Wil be entertained by the Chinese lega- icn. ADVERTISEMENTS. - Catarrh Is a constitutional disease. 1t originates in a scrofulous condition of the blood and depends on that conditicn. | it often causes headache and dizziness, impairs the taste, smell and hearing, af- | fects the vocal organs, disturbs the stom- | ach. iz | is always radically and permanentl: | cured by the blood-purifying, alteratiy | and tonic action of ‘Hood’s Sarsaparilla | This great medicine has wrought the most wonderful cures of all diseases de- ¥ | 04 | pending on scrofula or the scrofulous | habit. | _Hood" s are the best cathartic. | islands, | States.” ALL FOREIGNERS, THESE (SLANDERS Porto Ricans and Fili- pinos Must Pay Head Tax. Secretary Shaw’s Order Casts. New Cloud on Their Status. L Special Dispatch to The Call. CALL BUREAU, 1406 G STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.—Secretary Shaw caused an order to be issued to-day which ™ more ‘than - ever confounds the status of the Filipinos and the Porto Ri- cans. The inhabitants of those islands are defined by the acts of April 12, 1909, and July 1, 1902, to be citizens of these | respectively, ““and, as such, en- titled to the protection of the United The State Department not long ago issued instructions that the Filipinos | and the Porto Ricans should be treated as American zens are treated in the matter of the issuance of passports. In the orders issued to-day Porto Ri- cans and Filipinos on coming to this country are to be treated exactly as citi- zens of a foreign country, subject to im- migration laws and head tax. The or ders say “the provisions of the law reg lating immigration, including those which prescribe the payment of a tax, apply to the _residents ratives of Porto Rico and Philippine Islands, and, moreover, provisions of the law relating to the ex. clusion of Chinese apply to all of such| persons as are of the Chinese race. Citi- | zens and residents of said islands, there- | fore, should be admitted to the United States upon the same conditions and sub- ject to the same examinations as are en- forcgd against the people from countri over® which the United States claims no right of sovereignty whatever.” It is understood that the order was in-.| tended primarily to prevent the entrance of Chinese into this country from Philippines and Porto Rico. It is the be- lief of the -officlals that a test suit will ! be entered against the United States for | the levying of a head tax. Sach action | will meet.the desires of the officials, as they will then have something to go on outslde of the seemingly vague definition | of citizenship which Congress has given to_the fnhabitants of the islands. | During the jurisdiction of the War De- | partment and the State Department over the islands no case was ever allowed Lo | get into court to bring this question of citizenship clearly in issue. When the New York Herald, in the case of Jorge Cruz, a Porto Rican, gave the State De- partment ample opportunity to make a test case the department dodged the is- sue and allowed Cruz to go at large In this country rather than have his status defined. LORD KELVIN CHEERS | THE CABLE COMPANIES Eminent Scientist Says Wireless Telegraphy Need Cause No Alarm to Stockholders. TLONDON, Aug. 2.—At a meeting of the Anglo-American Telegraph Company, the | chairman, Francis A. Bevan, said nothing | had occurred so far as he knew to alter | the opinion of the directors that although wireless telegraphy would carry a certain class of telegrams, such as those between | ships or between ships and shore, there | was no reason apparent why it would | compete in the class of telegrams sent by | cable companies. During a conversation he other day with Lord Kelvin, tne lat- | ter said to Bevan; ! “I have given careful consideration to | this subject and I do not believe the shareholders of your company need be | and | | | { alarmed at the prospect of wireless teleg- raphy.” Walthour Lowers Record. NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—Bobby Walthour of Atlanta, Ga., continued in his winning streak to-day in the twenty-mile motor- paced race at Manhattan Beach by riding the distance in record time of 28:114-5. Riding the first mile in 1:25 and lowering the best previous track mark, his own, of 1:29 1-5, he chopped seconds off each suc- | ceeding 'mile, eventually eclipsing his work of July 26 by 40 4-5 seconds. At NEVADA, Aug. 2.—In the Superior Court a jury this morning brought in a verdict of ‘‘not guilty” in the case of the People vs. Abel Sandow, who was charged with having allowed hogs to pollute water. running into the reser- voirs which supply the city of Grass Valley DR. PIERCE’S REMEDIES. BY THE USE oF Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Mrs. H. A. Alsbrook, of Austin, Lonoke ., Atk writes: SAfter five months of great suffering with female weakness 1 Jwrite this for the benefit of other sufferers {rom the same affliction. I doctored with our family physician without any good re- sult, so my hisband urged me to try Dr. Pierce’s medicines —which 1 did, with wonderful results. Tam completely cured. Itook four bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite iption, four of his ‘ Golden Medical Discovery” and two vials of his * Pleasant lias an entirely new invention in Glasses for. seeiig both near and far, INSPECTION SOLICITED. 6,42_“ MARKETST BRUSHES &a e i brewers, bookbinders, candy-makers, canners, dyers, flour mills, foundries, laundries, paper- hangers. printers, painters, shce factories, #tablemen, tar-roofers, tanners, tailors, ete. LUCHANA + L) Brusi Manufacturars, 609 Sacramanto St FOR BAKBERS, ‘BA- kers, bootbiacks, bath- b bles, Pellets. » The Common Sense Medical Ad- viser, 1008 large pages in paper covers, is sent /yee on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to nse mailing only. TY i ey capera o8 Buffalo, N.V. Address Dr. Pierce, brhni{ards 7 Gured Secretly Any Lady Can do it at Home—Costs g Nothing to Try. A new tasteless discovery which 2otzee or food. Heartily cndorted by temperance workers. 1t does its worl: €0 € surely that while the devoted wife. sister o looks on. the draniard lently r daughter ard j3 veclaimed even againsthis will 2ad without hisknowledge. Senl your nameand address toDr. J. W. Haines, 5349 Glean Blig., Cincinnati, 0., and ho will mail a trial package ific'free to of Golden Spect EROW NOW CASILY 14 15 Lo cure A o wiTh This remedy. Full-sized boxes of Golden Specific are for tale in San Francisco by J. R. Gates & Co.. the | 2 Dr. 8. B. Hartman Will Treat Women Free of Charge Dur- ‘ing the Summer Months. Miss Tda B. Wood, Los Angeles, Cal, vice-president of the Young Women's Union, writes as follows: “I'am _thankful to you for placing on the market such a valuable medicine as Peruna. 1 consider it of especial value for the different aillments of women, ils restorative powers have saved me much pain and I now enjoy perfect health. I advise my fricnds to use Peruna instead of dector's prescriptions, which 1 have found very expensive and uncertain. Pe- runa is inexpensive and sure.”"—Miss Ida B. Wood. Miss Mattie Ketchum, Marshall, Texas, writes: *“Peruna has made ms a weil and strong wemin, and | hav> all the faith in the wor.d in it. When [ first began taking it | was troubled wiih head- ache and backache and dizzy spells. but taroe bottles of Peruna cured ma completely. [ havs not felt badly for over a year and am p.eased toat it was brought io my rotice. I have rscommended it to a number of my iriends.”—Miss Mattie Ksichum. Frai’ Wom n. That American women are growing more slender and frail is too apparent to any observer for argument. Slenderness and fragility are the words that best describe “the typical girl of to-day. From an aesthetic standpoint, perhaps, all this is an improvement on the more sturdy and buxom woman of two generations 250; but from the doctor’s standpoint is a rapid degeneration. Theee delicate crea- tures are easy to get sick, hard to keep well and very difficult to cure when sick. Dr. Hartman has given this subject es- i pecial study and thought, and has done much toward remedying the matter. He makes an annual distribution of books devoted to the subject of the care and cure of women. He conaucts a prodigious corres- pondence, wh ch covsrs all parts of the United States, g ving advice, pre- scriptions, etc., ete. All this he does without charge. Every letter recsives prompt and caretul attention, and is regarded as sirictly confidential. Dr. Hartman has mace extensive prepara- tons to treat thess women fordiseases peculiar to their sex during the sum- mer months. Ev:ry letier will bs an- swered giving the docior’s invaluable adv.ca atier forty-five years’ experi- | ence in the trsaiment of women. The doctor has now ready for the pub- He a book for women only. This book shows how few women are really free from catarrh; how many have catarrh some form or location. This book will be sent free to any woman addressing The Peruna Medicine Company, Colum- bus, Ohio. If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad- vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of the Hartman Sanitarium, CoJumbus, Ohio. The doctors cid not seem to help me, | Made Healt‘hy and Robust by Dr. Hariman’s Free ADVERTISEMENT! Correspond n.c. Ol NO FEAR NOW, Y3 SGRURMAN Cornell President Talks of the Philippine Problem. CHAUTAUQUA, N. Y., Aug. 2.—Presi- dent Schurman of Cornell University to- day delivered an address on “The Philip- pine Problem” before the Chautauqua Assembly. He said in part: We have planted government with the con- sent of the governed in Asia. The Philippines are thus not a colony, but an inciplent sister commmonwealth. Thé colonizing nations of Europe pooh-poch our _experiment. Heaven grant it may be a case of liberty enlightening the world. Certainly the grain of mustard sced will grow. Certainly the Fillpinos wili in time insist that the principle of the consent of the governed receive a broader and fuller application. 5 i But I repeat that thelr destiny is now in their own hands. Their friends in America can do nothing but support their efforts. The Filipinos may, however, take confidence from the fact that the promise and potency of every political good is contained in that principle of the consent of the governed which has, ger- { minally at least, been extended to them. Mean- time, and until after the inauguration of that Philippine Assembly in 1904, the Philippines will disappear as an issue from American poli- ties. ‘What I have said of the 6,500,000 Christian and civilized Filipinos of Luzon and the Visayas does not apply to.the remaining pop lation of the archipelago—the 1,500,000 of Mq hammedan (Moros) and heathen tribes who i habit Mindanao, Sulu, Basilan and Palawan, A strong external sovereignty must be exer- clsed over these barbarous and savage tribes, of whom some four score are known and named. It is these people who may fairly be compared with the North American Indians. And unless we turned them over to some other strong power we should have to retain our sovereignty over them even if we conferred in- dependence upon the 6,500,000 Christian and civilized Fidipinos of Luzon, the Visayas and the coasts of Mindanao. 1 may add that the circumstances that we have two such distinct and almost contradictory problems in the Phil- lipines make statements that are perfectly congruous appear to the uninitiated to be in- consistent and ‘‘wabbling."” Our army may have some trouble with the Moros and heathen tribes of the southern islands. American prospectors and traders will desire to press into the interior, and the na- i , apprehending the loss of their lands, will have recourse to arms in self-protection. Let our military authoritles pretect them against capitalistic exploitation, and our pres- sure upon them from the coast inward should be so gentle and so gradual as not to provoke hostility or awaken suspicion Practically all fundamental Philippine ques- tions (apart from the supreme question of in- dependence or statehood) have now been set- tled. The Filipinos wanted religious liberty, personal freedom, freedom of speech and other civil rights, a native legislative assembly and territorfal home rule; and these all have been conceded to them by the civil government bill recently signed by President Roosevelt. In the long run, of course, the Filipinos must be given either statehood in the American Union or in- dependence—an independence which may be actual and open like that of Cuba, or actual and veiled like that of Canada. Buf until their native legislative assembly is organized in 1904, and for a few years thereafter, this can scarce. ly be a practical issue, and for the meantime the Philippines will disappear as an fssue in American polities. —_— Root Proceeds to Carlsbad. PARIS, Aug. 2.—United States Secre- tary of War Elihu Root, who, in com- pany with General Horace Porter, United States Embassador to France, and Gen- eral Wood, arrived here Thursday night, proceeded this evening for Carlsbad, Aus. tria. The members of the United States embassy and Major Vignal, formerly at- tache of the French embassy at Washing- ton, were present. at station the railway to witness Root's departure. s ing of Santa Rosa Lodge No. 646, B. Exalted’ Ruler. A: B. Ware was last ‘night vresented with a gold-mous set with diamonds. Ware leaves :::‘: ;‘:&u&‘ SANTA ROSA, Aug’ 2.—At a special meet- 3% 5% 417 Sansome st. represent’ the lodge at Salt Lake. Ty = hf\»§;6 Y )\m) ‘) \‘t \ WOMEN [e M | '! \ i Troops Fight Near Cape Haytien. CAPE HAYTIEN, Aug. 2—A body of troops of General Nord, the Minister of ‘War of the provincial Government,’com- manded by General Piquion, has driven the army of General Salnav, who sup- ports M. Firmin for the presidency, to a point five leagues from Cape Haytien. A number of soldiers were killed or wounded. Troops from the district of Fort Libre are charging against the force from the Department of Artibonite at St. Michael. These two bodied are about equal in strength. s RO O May Yohe Appeals to Police. LONDON, Aug. 2—May Yohe this morning called on the police to ask them to help her find Putnam Bradlee Strong, but Scotland Yard declined to have any- thing to do with the matter, as she had preferred no charge against Strong. Miss Yohe started for Paris at 9 o'clock to- night on telegraphic assurance that she would receive word there of Strong's whereabouts. Active Demand for Office Help. There has never been a time in the his¥ tory of San Francisco when the demand for eflicient office help has been as active as it is at present. An education to fit.a young man or woman to fill responsible office positions can be obtaimed by even- ing study. Assistapt bookkeepers, clerks and mechanics, as well as others engaged during the day, asily improve. their cordition and Incredse their income by attending the night school of a reputable business college. Heald’s Business College at 24 Post street conducts a night school of a verv high class, completing the business adu- cation of many of its pupils In six months. It is conducted with the same energy “and vigor that has made their day school famous over this ceast. dnd each year they send into the:walks of business life graduates of. Shelr. might school who have had the detérmination and application required to study during hours that might be spent in pleasure or idleness. The Night School is conducted from 7 to 9 o'clock the first four evenings of the week throughout the year. 4% "/ Owl Customers Save Money. W i/ Supply your drug store needs at The Owl— f EPIY- ¥ rug : 3 » fl everything you can possibly want is here, and § ' lower in price than other stores charge. Quality {| 3 3 | i and price are the strong points here. Open day and night—telephone orders delivered—South 356. Quinine Pills—2 gr., per 100 30c. Precipitated Chalk— = . Cashmere Boquet 1b. package Y Soap, large 25¢c. Valdier’s Violet Ammonia 25¢. I}~ Welch Grape Julce, small 25c. Cold Cream— Ib. ting 50c. Welch Grape Juice, large 50c. Mellin’s Food, large size S55¢. Lola Montez Cream 65c. Absorbent Cotton—- H)l Coke Dandruff Cure, large 65c. Red Cross, Ib. 2455: b/ \ Reynal's Face Powder, Pabst Best Tonic, per bottle / \ . very finest S0c. Pabst Best Tonic, perdozen $2.50 25c. Sea Salt, 5 Ib. boxes lSc. French Castile Soap T ) e 1128 Macner St g, San Francisco %